Canada Science and Technology Museum: no layoffs, refunds during renovations
Staff will work to put on programming across Canada
CanadaScience and Technology Museum officialssaythere are no plans to lay off staff or reimburse people with memberships while the museum undergoes a multi-year renovation.
The federal government announced Monday the 47-year-old museum building off Saint Laurent Boulevard will be closed until 2017 for $80.5 million worthof work that includes a replacement for the roof, a new faade and upgrades tothe exhibit space.
Unsafe levels of mould were found followinga leak in the museum's roof in early September, forcing the museum's evacuation and leading to the decision to renovate.
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Alex Benay, CEO of the corporation that manages that museum, the CanadaAgriculture and Food Museum and the CanadaAviation and Space Museum, said on Tuesday thatstaff will be put to work on other projects at some of its other properties.
Benay had said on Monday that the renovations are a chance to launch a new focus for the museum that will bring more of its collection to Canadians, both digital and in person, and some staff have been assembled into an outreach team to help do that.
The Public Service Alliance of Canada, which is the union representing most museum workers, said it'sencouraged by how the corporation handled the sudden closure and it wants to make sure employees arent negatively impacted in the future.
Memberships good for other museums, future exhibits
Benay said given those outreach programs and the other two museums, peoples memberships will still offer them plenty.
As opposed to putting [the collection] in storage, I guess consider this a call-out to the community.If there are sites available for us to put as much of the exhibits and the collection and the experience out in an alternative facility or location for a few years, were certainly open to the discussion, he said.
We want to have that conversation because we want our members to be able to benefit from the collection.
Mondays announcement was made inside an exhibit on the Franklin expedition at Library and Archives Canada, a partnership between the libraryand the science and technology museum thatBenay has used as an example of what they can do in the months to come.